Thursday, September 8, 2016
Tuesday, September 6, 2016
Networking on Networked Governance
Dr. Terence Hay-Edie, UNEP-GEF-Small Grants Programme and WCPA Governance Specialist Group |
Dr. Ray Sauvajot, Associate Director for Natural Resource Stewardship and Science, US National Park Service |
Dr. Gary Tabor, Executive Director, Center for Large Landscape Conservation |
Climate change, habitat fragmentation and globalization require that conservation work at ever-larger scales. As we “scale up” to system-level planning and connectivity conservation, we must complement a focus on site-level management to accommodate and even embrace a multiplicity of ownerships and interests across landscapes of diverse and competing land uses. Our current treatment attempts to understand governance of protected areas of such landscapes by delineating four basic types (government, shared, private and indigenous/conserved). But in practice this typology can appear to introduce division whereas large-scale conservation requires integration.
We concluded that networked governance merits further study by the World Commission on Protected Areas, not that a global institution would have a direct role in networks that best evolve internally and organically, but so that multi-laterals not act in ways counter to effective networks.
Friday, September 2, 2016
NAWPA Launch
US National Park Service Director Jon Jarvis |
Alejandro del Mazo Maza, CONANP National Commissioner, Mexico |
Launch of the NAWPA Committee Report, Conservation in North America: An Analysis of Land-based Conservation in Canada, Mexico and the United States. NAWPA = North American Intergovernmental Committee on Cooperation for Wilderness and Protected Area Conservation
Thursday, September 1, 2016
Kuleana
129 nations — 9,000+ participants
The World Conservation Congress opened this morning in
Honolulu, Hawai’i. The recent announcement of the expansion of Papahānaumokuākea into
the largest protected area in the world lent the event a celebratory mood. The
host country greeted participants to epic traditional hula dances describing
the history and nature of the Hawaiian islands. Unfortunately, President Obama was not
in attendance. He’d spoken to a smaller group the night before at the
East-West Center but had to move on to Midway Island. We had his greeting read
out by the IUCN President, Zhang Xinsheng. Later, Erik Solheim, Director of the United
Nations Environment Program, quipped that the proclamation “reminds me how much
we will miss this President when he leaves office.”
Hawaiian words were often employed during the event to
express ideas, sometimes in fuller terms than can be used in English. Other
than aloha and mahalo, the most common word was kuleana. Translated to mean
responsibility, a quick scan of online sources suggests that kuleana is something
much deeper, extending to the value of responsibility. It seems kuleana is not
just about accepting responsibility, but seeing it as a privilege. The word
resonates for me with our notions of stewardship.
Interior Secretary Sally Jewell was introduced as the
“Steward-in-Chief…of approximately 20% of the United States.” She responded
that, “every day I think of my work as being in the forever business.” She
recognized the Centennial of the National Park Service, and later pointed to
“evidence that we are beginning to plan and think and work at a broader
landscape scale…the path to our sustainable future means pulling up to a larger
landscape level.”
The President of the Republic of Palau, Tommy
Remengesau, set the bar high for future conservation targets. He described how
his country has set aside 80% of its Exclusive Economic Zone as no-take marine
reserves. Returning to the theme of Papahānaumokuākea
he said, “Good start, President Obama. When you protect 80% of your EEZ, then
the United States will be ready to join the big leagues!”
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